Guide Contents

Administrative Information

Access and
Restrictions:

This collection is open for research.

Digital Surrogates: Except where indicated, this document describes but
does not reproduce the actual text, images and objects which make up this
collection. Materials are available only in the Special Collections
Department.

Use of Collections:The University of Iowa Libraries supports
access to the materials, published and unpublished, in its collections.
Nonetheless, access to some items may be restricted by their
fragile condition or by contractual agreement with donors, and
it may not be possible at all times to provide appropriate machinery
for reading, viewing or accessing non-paper-based materials.
Please read our Use of
Manuscripts Statement.

Biographical Note

Leon H. Caverly was born on November 22, 1884
in Dover, New Hampshire, married in the early 1900s and had a child. His wife died in the flu pandemic of 1918, by which time Caverly was a cinematographer
who in June 1917 had joined the Marine Corps Publicity Bureau. His daughter was raised by his wife's mother.

Caverly was sent to Europe where he documented military activities in France,
Belgium, and Germany with both motion picture and still photography. He
writes in a later letter that a film titled America’s Answer
to the Huns, the
second official U.S. government war film, contains much of his work. A
surviving print of this film has not yet been located. After the Armistice,
he worked filming Russian prisoner camps in Germany and German civilian
riots in Berlin. In September of 1919, the Marines sent Caverly to Cuba
and Haiti for six months to do documentary photography. He was mustered
out in 1920.

He returned to private sector employment, and through the 1920s he seems to have worked for or with traveler and travel writer E.M. Newman, traveling and photographing for the "Newman Traveltalks" books; Seeing Paris (1931) includes 300
Caverly photographs. He married a second time in 1925, to Grace V. Kopp, and may have had his own business from 1926 to 1929 or 1930. In 1933, the Caverly's had a daughter, Lynn Gail Caverly Hartung. Damaged financially by the 1929 stock market crash, he took a took a job as a photostat
operator in New York City, in which position he remained until he retired in 1956,
at the age of 72. He died December 12, 1966, and was buried in the Long Island National Cemetary.

Some of his World War I glass slides and photographs were donated to the Historical Society
in Newark, New Jersey. There is also a collection of Caverly's materials
at the Smithsonian Musuem in Washington, D.C.

Scope and
Contents

The collection comprises a series of 20 letters, 4 photographs
and 1 business card. All but one of the letters are written by Caverly to
F. G. Riley, also a New York photographer. The letter of August 1, 1918 includes
a signed sketch. The collection also includes one letter dated January 24,
1917, from movie director and producer Herbert Brenon to Riley. Correspondence
is arranged chronologically. Photographs are in protective sleeves.

Photographs:

Box 1

Acquisition and Processing
Information

These papers
were purchased by the University of Iowa Libraries in 2005 with funds provided
by The Friends of the Libraries.

Guide posted
to Internet:

February
2006

.

Box Contents List

Box 1

Correspondence 1917--1920

Photographs

Copies of letters of commendation and biographical information about Caverly provided by his daughter, Lynn Caverly Hartung.

"My Trip Over Seas." LHC's seven page account of his travel to France on a troopship, the first months of training in France for trench warfare, and his first visit to the trenches. Also an descriptive inventory of approximately 300 photographs he made in France. Both documents are photocopies of LHC typescripts held by the New Jersey Historical Society. Two photographs have printed out from digital versions and placed in this folder.